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What is NYC AC § 19-128?

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This section outlines the responsibilities of the department regarding the maintenance and repair of priority regulatory signs and traffic control signals that are damaged or missing. It mandates timely action to ensure these signs are operational and visible to motorists. Applies to property owners with signs affecting traffic safety.

General informational summary. Not legal advice for your situation. Consult an attorney before acting on any specific matter.

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§ 19-128 Damaged or missing signs and signals.

AC § 19-128

a. For the purposes of this section, the following terms shall be defined as follows: (i) "priority regulatory sign" shall mean a stop sign, yield sign, do not enter sign, or one way sign; (ii) "traffic control signal" shall have the same meaning as set forth in section one hundred fifty-four of the vehicle and traffic law or any successor provision thereto. b. The department shall maintain a log of notices regarding priority regulatory signs and traffic control signals that are missing or damaged to the extent that any such sign or signal is not operational, visible or legible to a motorist who must obey or rely upon such sign or signal. Such log shall include the date and time such notice was received and the date and time on which such priority regulatory sign or traffic control signal was repaired or replaced, or the date on which a determination was made that repair or replacement was not warranted and the reason for such determination. c. The department shall within three business days of receiving notice that a stop sign, yield sign or do not enter sign is missing or damaged to the extent that such sign is not visible or legible to a motorist who must obey or rely upon such sign either (i) repair or replace such sign or (ii) make a determination that repair or replacement is not warranted. d. The department shall within seven business days of receiving notice that a one way sign is missing or damaged to the extent that such sign is not visible or legible to a motorist who must obey or rely upon such sign either (i) repair or replace such sign or (ii) make a determination that repair or replacement is not warranted. e. Within twenty-four hours of receiving notice that a traffic control signal is missing or damaged to the extent that such signal is not operational or visible to a motorist who must obey or rely upon such signal the department shall: (i) repair or replace such signal, (ii) implement alternative measures to control traffic if such repair or replacement will take greater than twenty-four hours, or (iii) make a determination that repair or replacement is not warranted. f. This section shall not apply with regard to traffic control signals at a location where multiple traffic control signals are present and facing the same direction in the same intersection and one or more of such signals remains operational. Editor's note: For related unconsolidated provisions, see Appendix A at L.L. 1993/104.

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